Massachusetts Leads the Nation in LGBT Economic Opportunity

Massachusetts Leads the Nation in LGBT Economic Opportunity

The first state to legalize same-sex marriage a decade ago is making LGBT history again. The governor of the commonwealth of Massachusetts today said “I do” to LGBT equality in economic opportunity, reports The Republican, a newspaper in Springfield, Mass. 

Gov. Charlie Baker issued an executive order Tuesday making Massachusetts the first state to include LGBT-owned businesses in a program that requires contractors bidding on a state project costing more than $150,000 to commit to spending a percentage of the money on diverse subcontractors and suppliers.

“The goal is to provide a much higher quality product by opening up opportunities for others to play who know they can do the work but have been basically shut out because of a series of very complex and in most cases unnecessary barriers to participation,” Baker said.

Speaking to a group of reporters, Baker later said the changes are about “leveling the playing field,” not about giving a leg up to preferred businesses. “The people who have a leg up are people who have resources and infrastructure to meander their way through a very complex and at times somewhat nonsensical procurement process here in Massachusetts.”

The National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce will certify businesses as LGBT-owned for the state. Jonathan Lovitz, the NGLCC’s vice president of external affairs, told Fortune magazine that for a company to be considered, 51 percent or more of the firm must be owned by lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender individuals.

Although Baker’s order recognizing LGBT-owned businesses is the only statewide initiative of its kind, ​Fortune reported the NGLCC boasts of several success stories with state agencies and municipalities, including the California Public Utilities Commission as well as Essex County, N.J., and Cleveland. 

According to a 2006 report from the Hackett Group, companies that focus heavily on supplier diversity generate a 133 percent greater return on procurement investments than a typical business. About one-third of Fortune 500 companies also recognize LGBT-owned enterprises in their contracting processes, according to the NGLCC.

Massachusetts introduced the supplier diversity initiative in 2010 to provide minority- and women-owned businesses with equal access to state contracts.

Businesses owned by service-disabled veterans were added in 2013, and Baker’s executive order expands that to all veterans as well as people with disabilities and companies owned by lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people. 

Dawn Ennis

www.advocate.com/business/2015/11/03/massachusetts-leads-nation-lgbt-economic-opportunity

Gay Dartmouth Athlete Is Running A Marathon For A Great Cause

Gay Dartmouth Athlete Is Running A Marathon For A Great Cause

One night last winter, as I lay in bed, unable to sleep, I decided to go for a walk around the pond north of campus. As I walked, the bitter-cold air piercing my clothes, I contemplated the emptiness I felt in my heart, the inability to care, and my frustration with not being able to feel anything. I was exhausted from living with a constant aching inside me, from having my friends and family comment on how sad and aloof I seemed, from being the person I had become. In the quiet of this cold New Hampshire night, I reached my breaking point.

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Child Threatened With Expulsion For Talking About Her Gay Dads

Child Threatened With Expulsion For Talking About Her Gay Dads

gayparenting1Two men have asserted they were forced to yank their 7-year-old daughter out of her private Christian school after she openly spoke in class about her parents being gay.

The girl in question — neither her name nor the last names of her parents are being printed to protect their privacy — was allegedly sternly reprimanded by administrators, who insisted she never speak of such things again, or she’ll be expelled.

Brendan, one of her fathers, only came out recently. He initially enrolled his daughter at Foundation Christian College with his ex-wife:

“I was told that they don’t promote ‘gay’ at the school and [my daughter] was unable to talk about my life between [my partner] and me. She could mention my name, but she couldn’t talk about us being gay or relating to us as a couple, so … we were forced to say that she wasn’t allowed to talk about Daddy or [my partner] at all.”

“I told them that I expected my daughter to be able to talk about home life like any other kid in the class.”

Brendan claims the principal, Andrew Newhouse, told him he felt fooled at the interview.

“He said to me that ‘If we knew you were gay at the interview you would never have got in this school.’”

Related: Things People Ask Gay Dads (But Probably Shouldn’t)

The two men decided to yank her from FCC and enroll her in public school to avoid further harassment.

“Why does my daughter have to go through this and lose her best friends due to the person I am?” Brendan asked. “I carry a lot of guilt and I hate that my daughter has to deal with her dad not being accepted.”

Newhouse told Mandura Mail that children of same-sex parents are indeed not welcome at the school.

“The [school] board are firm in their view that families have a mother and father who raise children jointly. The board also has a strong view that families with same-sex parents do not support a Christian world view. I mentioned to the parent that if his daughter was to continue this topic of discussion with her peers, then it would be in both his and his daughter’s interests to move to a school that would support his world view.”

Newhouse further elucidated to 9 News, saying the girl was openly discussing “her disappointment with Tony Abbott, the then-prime minister, not allowing her dad and his partner to marry.”

In a letter to parents, he wrote that the “Christian values being taught in the classroom were being undermined. It’s not helpful to confuse children at such a young age with complex and controversial issues.”

“She’s the one who brought it up,” argues Kim Simes, Midwest regional manager for the national nonprofit Family Equality Council,
so clearly it’s not confusing to a 7-year-old.”

She tells Yahoo Parenting:

“I think as adults, we’re the ones who muck it up and make these issues controversial. The kids are fine with it. That’s one of the worst forms of bullying there is — to be given the message of ‘your family isn’t worthy,’ and that this is not a safe place to talk about it. [It’s] horrific, and it breaks my heart to know that school officials, who are supposed to have the best interest of kids in mind, are using tactics like that.”

Despite the fact that it’s a Christian school, many parents disagree with the administration’s stance. They’ve emailed the school or posted their views on Facebook.

More than 20,000 have signed a Change.org petition, which urgse the local Minister for Education in Australia to “ban schools rejecting kids based on homophobia,” especially since the private school receives “millions of taxpayer dollars.”

 

H/t: LGBTQ Nation

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/gMvDfsW-mJA/child-threatened-with-expulsion-for-talking-about-her-gay-dads-20151103

Gus Kenworthy’s Publicist Is Making Him ‘Cool It’ With the Shirtlessness: LISTEN

Gus Kenworthy’s Publicist Is Making Him ‘Cool It’ With the Shirtlessness: LISTEN

GUS KENWORTHY

Recently out gay Olympian Gus Kenworthy said we might not be seeing too many more photos of him shirtless in the near future if his publicist gets their way.

Kenworthy spoke candidly about his exhibitionist tendencies with Michelangelo Signorile on his Sirius XM radio show on Tuesday:

“I need to cool it with that — according to my publicist,” Kenworthy said with a devilish smile while gesturing to his rep, sitting nearby. “But I don’t know, I guess I just felt like for so long, kind of pretending to be straight and lying in interviews, and everything that I was doing to try and fit in, I felt like I was like — I know it’s not actually clothes — but I felt like I was covering myself, and covering myself, and covering myself, and really censoring myself. So when I got to the point where I was really telling people that I was gay and I knew that I was going to come out publicly and stuff, it was sort of nice, and I guess freeing, to do something like that that was kind of off-brand for me, and something fun and I guess kind of objectifying, but still something that was fun and different.”

He added: “And I think I was insecure at that time. I mean, I was excited to come out but I was scared for what everyone was going to say and I knew that it was something that was happening very soon. And maybe, on a lower level, I guess I needed a little bit of attention.”

RELATED: Gus Kenworthy is a God Among Olympians and Here are the Photos to Prove It

Kenworthy also responded to criticism he received about one of his Halloween costumes (not the mouse or the cop) in which he dressed up as a Native American:

“I didn’t think for a second when I did it that I was being offensive,” he explained. “I would’ve never done anything that I thought was going to offend anybody.”

After he deleted the photo, Kenworthy Googled around, where he said he learned a lesson.

“I went on my phone and I Googled — like an idiot — but like, ‘Is it racist to dress up like a Native American?’ And, I guess the answer is yes… It’s sort of a vague line, because if you’re a character, then it’s not really racist but if you’re just, like, an Indian, then it’s sort of racist. But at the same point, even a character, like Pocahontas or someone, for example, is still sort of based on a racial stereotype and sort of a misinterpretation of a culture. I felt guilty that I had done it. I also feel that sometimes people do really overreact. It’s Halloween. It’s a night to dress-up. But I don’t want to make anyone uncomfortable or feel like I was being rude or insensitive. So I took it down… I feel like, lesson learned and I won’t do it again.”

Listen to Kenworthy address his shirtlessness and his Halloween costumes, below:

RELATED: Gus Kenworthy Falls Hard For Fall in NYC’s Central Park: PHOTOS

The post Gus Kenworthy’s Publicist Is Making Him ‘Cool It’ With the Shirtlessness: LISTEN appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

Gus Kenworthy’s Publicist Is Making Him ‘Cool It’ With the Shirtlessness: LISTEN

You Won't Believe Who Bought JebCanFixIt.com

You Won't Believe Who Bought JebCanFixIt.com

A gay man from Austin who waged an unsuccessful campaign for City Council has bought the domain name for Jeb Bush’s latest campaign slogan.

Jimmy Flannigan’s purchase of JebCanFixIt.com is certainly not an endorsement of the former Florida governor’s presidential campaign. Flannigan is a Democrat (unlike Bush) and feels that Bush stole the slogan he used for his campaign last year, when he narrowly lost to antigay politician Don Zimmerman.

Flannigan explains more on the site: 

My campaign slogan during the race was “Flannigan Can Fix It”, complete with website and signage that we later placed all over the district. Our campaign video (and pop-up video version) helped promote the message online that I would be able to fix the problems in District 6.

Fixing problems facing a community is exactly what local government does. It’s not what a President does. Local government works to fix potholes, fix zoning and neighborhood land use, fix affordability problems for homeowners and renters. Presidents are supposed to lead the nation on large and long-term policy matters and diplomacy.

With Jeb launching his “Jeb Can Fix It” tour because he thinks he can “fix” the problems facing America, I challenge him to at least do a “fix it” video better than I did for my city council race!

During the campaign, Flannigan spun the slogan into an inventive, nearly six-minute-long video that was made without edits. Maybe he has a future in Hollywood?

Neal Broverman

www.advocate.com/election/2015/11/03/you-wont-believe-who-bought-jebcanfixitcom

Accountability and Healing: On Gay Men and Intimate Partner Violence

Accountability and Healing: On Gay Men and Intimate Partner Violence
2015-10-29-1446131346-9579527-6263836018_9cc7dbc640_z.jpg

I’m writing this article for the gay men and boys we all know. For the gay boys struggling with self esteem. For the gay men trying to hold back tears and trauma through clenched smiles and cynical social media status updates. I’m writing this article for the gay men who will never share what happened to them. The gay men too proud to talk about how another man held them down and hurt them. The gay boys who will never mention the time they hit someone they loved. The gay boys who can’t navigate the confusion and the pain intertwined with the longing and the desire. I’m writing this article for them. I’m writing this article for you. I’m writing this article for all of us.

You are not alone. The statistics on domestic violence tell a sad story. But what’s even sadder, is that we know the statistics only reflect what is reported. There is so much more pain out there that will never make it onto a researcher’s spreadsheet.

But before we discuss further; let me be clear — American culture is born and bred in violence. That this violence is in our homes and relationships is nothing more than a reflection of society as a whole. And like the society as a whole, a great deal of the gay community is dealing with generations of untreated trauma. Where there is untreated trauma, there will be violence. Where there is violence, there is untreated trauma.

I’ve seen this firsthand. For three years I worked as a family intervention counselor, working with men who had assaulted their partners. What I found were everyday men, not boogey monsters and ghosts. I found men who could be my uncles, brothers, cousins. Men who were nuanced and complicated. Men who were often victims of violence themselves. They were not horrible people. They were people who had made horrible choices and needed to be held accountable and led through a process to unlearn their behavior. For the past few months, I’ve shifted my focus to looking speficially at gay men and trauma- with an emphasis on black gay men. The evident impact as well as lack of connection to services has been devastating. I’ve come across more men than you can imagine who have been beaten or raped but thought it was nothing. But minimizing trauma doesen’t stop it from impacting our choices. And for so many of us the pain remains in control.

Gay male culture is still struggling to come out of the psychological specter of shame that has encased our desire for hundreds of years via homophobia,misogny and racism. Yet what is unique about gay male communities is that we have largely been held exempt from an analysis of these issues. It is this lack of analysis and activism from within gay male communities that has carved out a culture where sexual harassment, rape and violence are just seen as “boys being boys”. Where stalking or predatory practices are not named abuse. Where inappropriate and disrespectful statements from strangers are just another day out with the boys.

Katrina Kubicek, of the Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles, has conducted research which has revealed what an abusive and violent present many gay men live in. Kubicek’s research, conducted amongst a group of young men in Los Angeles, gives us depressing numbers:

Up to 43 percent of respondents report pushing or shoving a partner.
20 percent report hitting or kicking a partner.
30 percent report being slammed against a wall by a partner.
25 percent Kicked or bit a partner.
6 percent reported being forced to have sex.
37 percent report feeling coerced to have sex without a condom.

When asked about the research, Kubicek shared:

When we first asked them (young gay men) to define or describe what they consider to be partner violence or domestic violence, they saw it as something that happens between a man and a woman. They felt that violence between two men was just seen as “two men fighting”. In addition, when initially asked to describe what they consider to be violence, most did not initially identify emotional or psychological abuse as part of it…

She then further states:

We have done a pretty good job in educating the public that domestic violence is not OK; however, the images we see and the stories that are told are those of heterosexuals, mainly women. Society, and as a result, many young men themselves, have a hard time labeling what is going on in their relationships as partner violence.

This leads us to many questions: Where do you go as a gay man who is trying to navigate abuse? Where do you go if you are gay men in a relationship where you both physically fight each other? Especially if you are gay man of color? Or if you are disabled? Or trans? What if you don’t have private insurance for a therapist, or only access to therapists who don’t understand the nuances of domestic violence?

Kubicek:

Young men did not generally seek assistance from professionals. There are limited services that are designed for gay men, or any sexual minority, who are involved in violence…Very few young men {also} reported trying to access services. There was a general perception that police would be difficult to work with and would not understand the situation. However, I am happy to say that of those young men who did call the police, they all reported positive experiences.

The study conducted by Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles was small, however national studies by the CDC reflect the same challenges for not only gay men, but for lesbian, trans, bisexual and queer communities as well. Organizations such as the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs, The GLBTQ Domestic Violence Project and the Northwest Network provide resources and advocacy on this issue yet in most parts of the country resources are limited or non existent. Dominant domestic violence organizations have largely failed to incorporate gay male issues into their analysis and even more so into the conversation on masculinity — so for the vast number of gay men, struggling with rage or grappling with abusive dynamics, there is often no where to go to heal. But in order to support young gay men, we need education, advocacy and culturally competent services that stop violence, hold men accountable and lead them to do restorative emotional work. We cannot wait or depend on the criminal legal system, which, especially for gay men of color, has shown in so many ways that is it not transformative nor a tool for our healing. This work is an immediate need that is intertwined with poverty, HIV/AIDS, racism, ableism, respectability, homophobia and much more. We can’t wait…….

I wrote this article for gay boys and gay men. I wrote this for the gay men reading this remembering what they did. I wrote this for the gay boys crying over what they are trying to forget. I wrote this for the gay couples trying to understand why it happened. For the gay men who want to help their friends but don’t know how to. For the gay men tracing the trauma back to their childhoods, forced to reconcile wounds that only the little boys inside them remember. For the gay men who can’t face how much they hurt someone. I wrote this article for gay boys and men. I wrote this article for all for us. I wrote this article for you. There is nothing wrong with you. You are not alone. And another way of being in the world is possible. There are people around you who want to help. Wherever you are and whomever you are, in the midst of your challenges I want you to remember: “For great as the powers of destruction may be, Greater still, are the powers of healing.”*

If you or someone you know needs help, please share the following resources. You can also use them to educate yourself on violence in Gay male and LGBT communities.
Resources:

Six Ways to Confront Your Friend Who’s Abusing Thier Partner
The Northwest Network
The National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1−800−799−7233
The National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs
Men Stopping Violence
Gay & Lesbian Domestic Violence Wheel
7 Warning Signs Your Partner May be Emotionally Abusive

*Image By Eric Vondy.
*Starhawk

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



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